Method and system establishing a network connection

ABSTRACT

A method of establishing a network connection between an application hosted on a first network device and a second network device, comprising receiving data from the application indicating communication requirements for the network connection, identifying a plurality of alternative available transport level components; and based on the received data, selecting one of the transport level components for use in the network connection.

FIELD

Embodiments described herein relate to methods and systems for establishing a network connection between entities in a communications network.

BACKGROUND

Quality of Service (QoS) is an important consideration for implementing networked applications. The QoS for any given application will depend on the type of transport protocol that is employed for that application. In conventional distributed systems, considering a layered architecture, optimisation of QoS is initiated and often carried out at the application layer, with the result that all ensuing communications are transported using the same transport layer protocol (which in the Internet may be the Transport Control Protocol TCP, for example). However, mechanisms for optimising QoS can negatively impact application and network performance when the network environment changes over time, or where the system includes multiple applications having differing networking requirements.

It follows that it is desirable to provide new mechanisms for optimising QoS when establishing network connections between devices in a machine-to-machine distributed system.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES

Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:

FIG. 1 shows an example of a conventional system in which a utility provider communicates with buildings in a near-me area network (NAN);

FIG. 2 shows an example of a system according to an embodiment;

FIG. 3 shows a graph comparing performance of 3 different communication approaches in terms of latency, when given the same task;

FIG. 4 shows a table comparing the communication approaches employed in FIG. 3 in terms of the number of packets and bandwidth required for the task;

FIG. 5 shows a schematic of a conventional system;

FIG. 6 shows a schematic of a system according to an embodiment;

FIG. 7 shows a schematic of a system according to an embodiment;

FIG. 8 shows an example of a system according to an embodiment, in which each network device is provided with its own respective middleware component;

FIG. 9 shows an example of the sequence of events involved in session initiation in a system according to an embodiment;

FIG. 10 shows a schematic of a system according to another embodiment;

FIG. 11 shows a structural overview of a middleware component as used in a device according to an embodiment;

FIG. 12 shows a flow-chart illustrating the steps by which an application is interfaced with a network, according to an embodiment; and

FIG. 13 shows a flow-chart of steps implemented within a middleware component in a device according to an embodiment.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

According to a first embodiment, there is provided a method of establishing a network connection between an application hosted on a first network device and a second network device, comprising:

-   -   receiving data from the application indicating communication         requirements for the network connection;     -   identifying a plurality of alternative available transport level         components; and     -   based on the received data, selecting one of the transport level         components for use in the network connection.

The plurality of transport level components may include one or more transport protocols. The plurality of transport level components may include one or more messaging patterns.

The transport level component may be chosen so as to optimise the quality of service (QoS) of the network connection.

The communication requirements may relate to one or more of the latency and bandwidth required for the network connection.

In some embodiments, the choice of the transport level component may be varied during the course of a single session between the application and the second network device. A first one of the available transport level components may be selected during initiation of the session and an alternative one of the available transport level components may be subsequently selected during that same session.

In some embodiments, the method may include receiving information about the network environment. The choice of transport level component may be determined at least in part based on the information. The selection of transport level components may be varied overtime in response to changes in the network environment.

The first network device may host a plurality of applications. In some embodiments, the method may comprise establishing a respective network connection for each application, the selection of transport components being carried out independently for each application.

In some embodiments, the method may comprise generating a respective network socket for each application, the socket being generated based on the transport components selected for that application's network connection.

In some embodiments, the method may comprise transmitting data from the application to the second network device across the network connection.

According to a second embodiment, there is provided a device for establishing a network socket for connecting an application to a communications network, the device comprising:

-   -   a middleware component configured to interface with the         application and to receive data from the application indicating         communication requirements of the application;     -   the middleware being operable to identify a plurality of         alternative available transport level components for use in         communicating data from the application over the network and to         select one of the transport level components for generating the         network socket.

The plurality of transport level components may include one or more transport protocols. The plurality of transport level components may include one or more messaging patterns.

The transport level component may be chosen so as to optimise the quality of service QoS of the network connection.

The communication requirements may relate to one or more of the latency and bandwidth required for the network connection.

In some embodiments, the middleware component is configured to vary the choice of the transport level component during the course of a single session between the application and the second network device. The middleware component may be configured to select a first one of the available transport level components during initiation of the session and to subsequently select an alternative one of the available transport level components during that same session.

The middleware may be configured to receive as input information about the network environment and to select the transport level component at least in part based on the information. The middleware may be configured to interface with a plurality of applications and to receive data from each application indicating communication requirements of the respective application. The middleware may be operable to select a transport level component for generating a respective network socket for each application, wherein the transport level components are selected independently for each application.

In some embodiments, each application is hosted on the device.

According to a third embodiment, there is provided a system comprising a plurality of devices according to the second embodiment.

According to a fourth embodiment, there is provided a system comprising a network device that hosts one or more applications and one or more devices according to the second embodiment.

According to a fifth embodiment, there is provided a computer readable storage medium comprising computer executable instructions that when executed by the computer will cause the compute to carry out a method according to the first embodiment.

FIG. 1 shows an example of a conventional system, in which a utility provider 1 communicates with buildings in a near-me area network (NAN) 3. Data is sent between the utility 1 and the other entities in the NAN 3 via a network connection 5. All data that is sent is transmitted using the same combination of components in the transport layer. In the example shown in FIG. 1, this combination comprises a single TCP transport protocol and messaging pattern. The ability to prioritise performance on a per-application basis is not available, i.e. there is no option for the application to dynamically adapt to changing network conditions or QoS priority changes through modifying the transport protocol or messaging pattern.

In contrast to the situation shown in FIG. 1, embodiments described herein provide a mechanism, whereby communications can be optimised on a per-application and per-connection basis through the manipulation and selection of the application's transport level components. FIG. 2 shows a pictorial representation of such a system. Here, data can be communicated between the utility provider 7 and the homes in the NAN 9 using a range of different messaging patterns and/or transport protocols 11 a, 11 b, 11 c in the transport layer. Embodiments described herein have particular utility in resource constrained network environments as presented by the Smart Grid and the Internet of Things (IoT), which lack the network resources available when using modern high speed LANs and WANs, for example.

The advantage afforded by embodiments described herein can be understood with reference to FIGS. 3 and 4. The graph of FIG. 3 shows a simulation of how three different communication approaches will perform in terms of latency, given the same task. Where reduced latency is a priority, it is clear that Brokerless TCP is the optimal approach as it provides the lowest latency. However, as shown in the table of FIG. 4, the same is not true if bandwidth, rather than latency, is prioritised; in this case, broker-less multicast is the optimal choice as it requires the least bandwidth. These results show that specific combinations of transport and messaging pattern lead to trade-offs in terms of, in this case, latency and bandwidth. The manipulation of these transport level attributes can therefore offer advantages in terms of overall QoS, by allowing networked devices and the networking system to effect different priorities for different QoS metrics in different parts of the system.

An example of a system according to an embodiment will now be described with reference to FIGS. 5 to 7.

FIG. 5 shows a schematic of a conventional system. An application 51 hosted on a network device 53 (which may be, for example, a desktop computer, laptop, tablet or mobile phone) communicates with the network 55 via a standard network interface 57, typically a socket application programming interface (API). In this case, the low level configuration (address, port, transport protocol etc.) of the communications interface is carried out in the application layer of the network and takes place entirely during the application runtime. The application must support each transport protocol and messaging pattern in use; typically, this is achieved through the use of individually included socket APIs. The transport options are fixed at run time.

FIG. 6 shows a schematic of a system according to an embodiment. The arrangement is similar to that of FIG. 5, but includes an additional middleware component 69 that sits between the application 61 and the network interface 67. In this example, all low level details pertaining to setting up communications are abstracted to the middleware component 69.

The middleware component can be considered as a discrete software entity facilitating the abstraction of advanced communication transport options from the application transparently, by generating customised network interface sockets at runtime. Through use of the middleware component, it is possible to facilitate and manage transport level Quality of Service in a way that provides measurable performance increases compared to conventional systems that use a fixed transport paradigm.

In use, the application will send its high level requirements to the middleware component and the middleware component will then deal with creating a custom network interface with the desired attributes. The middleware is used to form a network interface that is generic on the application facing side and highly customised on the network facing side; whilst the communication interface between the application and the middleware can be viewed as simple, fixed and self-descriptive, the interface formed between the middleware and the network is more complex and may vary over time.

The middleware component is used to actively select network interface characteristics including, for example, the transport layer protocol and/or messaging pattern that is used for passing data to and/or from the application. The choice of transport protocols may include, for example, Transport Control Protocol (TCP), User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Unicast, User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Multicast and Pragmatic General Multicast (PGM). The middleware may also incorporate external inputs such as network conditions in order to influence its choice of network interface characteristics. FIG. 7 shows how the middleware 77 may interact with one or more different types of application programming interfaces, including Socket APIs 52, Transport APIs and Message APIs 76 in order to form an interface between the application 71 and network 73. It will be understood that there is no limit on the number of network interface components (transport protocols, messaging patterns etc.) that form the interface choice pool. Applications do not need to have any specific support for the transport protocols and messaging patterns used by the middleware. The transport options are not fixed at run time but may be dynamically varied so as to optimise the QoS for the application.

In embodiments described herein, the network devices and the middleware components can be considered collectively to comprise a system. In some embodiments, each network device in the system may have its own associated middleware component. An example of this is illustrated in FIG. 8, in which two network devices 81, 83 are each provided with their own respective middleware components 85, 87, these modules being used to facilitate communication between the network devices 81, 83. However, it will be understood by the person skilled in the art that a given middleware component need not be exclusively coupled to a single device; for example, a middleware component may be installed on a separate (remote) device with which more than one network device can communicate and interact.

Each middleware component may automatically generate more instances of itself and automatically deploy them to additional processes, threads and servers. Doing so is useful as the processor intensive parts of this communication method are all abstracted to the middleware. It is also possible to provide redundancy in the system, whereby, in the event that a particular middleware instance fails or it is no longer possible to contact that instance, network devices may initiate communication with different instances located elsewhere in the system.

In embodiments described herein, the loosely coupled nature of the architecture provides a large degree of scalability potential. For example, the middleware does not have any restrictions on its execution environment. The middleware can be located within the same address space as the application(s), on remote hardware connected by the internet or anywhere between these two extremes. Thus, a single broker based middleware entity may deal with all communications for a large group of managed applications at one extreme and at the other extreme, every application may have its own middleware process running on the same processor as itself.

The middleware provides the ability to generate per-application customised network sockets. These sockets provide a software interface to the physical network that puts data on to the communication link (wired or wireless) for each application. This interface is assignable to any application within the scope of the execution environment. The application sends the raw payload to the middleware and it deals with the transport protocol and messaging pattern combinations transparently. This allows the application to continue operating while the underlying transport attributes are dynamically modified to best suit current network conditions and the application's specified priorities in terms of bandwidth, latency and reliability. In this way, it becomes possible to dynamically select optimum transport protocol and/or messaging patterns for devices in distributed machine-to-machine systems, whilst taking into account factors including the device capabilities and network connection state/quality.

The middleware facilitates several key operations:

1. Application pool management—The middleware will ensure there is always a free application process to deal with incoming messages addressed to that worker pool. When new work is received the middleware will fork( ) and exec( ) a new application worker process. This allows the application to scale with workloads easily. When the worker is no longer needed it is destroyed to conserve resources.

2. Session initiation—The middleware will perform all session initiation operations on behalf of its applications. All session initiations are between local and remote middleware instances.

3. External network status input—The middleware will take an external input (link latency, link bandwidth, packet loss etc.) and incorporate that information into the transport selection process in order to choose an optimal transport option.

4. Link Fanout Estimation—The middleware will enquire about how many remote middleware instances are interested in its message and incorporate that information into the transport selection process in order to choose an optimal transport option.

An example of the sequence of events involved in session initiation is explained with reference to FIG. 9, which shows the interaction between middleware components associated with two networked devices (labeled as local and remote, respectively). The sequence begins when the local middleware component receives a message from its associated application with an unrecognised destination (Step S91). The local middleware prepares and sends a Fanout Request (FREQ) to the middleware component associated with the remote device (Step S92). In Step S93, the remote middleware component issues a Fanout Response (FRES), after which the local middleware initiates a session with the remote middleware (Step S94). During this step, the local middleware establishes the transport options that are to be used during the session. The remote middleware transmits a Session Initialisation Response (SIR) and a session is set up between the two devices (Step S95). Messages are then sent between the two devices using the transport options specified by the local middleware at the point of initialising the session.

The session initiation allows the customised transport options to be communicated and set up. Session initiation with the destination middleware is transparently handled from the application's point of view. Once a session has been set up, the communication method can be changed as often as desired during that session, for example in order to maintain optimal performance in changing network conditions. The middleware will deal with all session initiation aspects that come with changing the low level transport attributes dynamically at run time.

FIG. 10 shows a further example of a system according to an embodiment. In this embodiment, the network device 103 hosts multiple applications 101 a, 101 b, 101 c that operate simultaneously using multiple different communication approaches. Each application is interfaced with the network 105 via the middleware 109. For each application, the middleware 109 tailors the transport protocol and/or messaging pattern to obtain optimal efficiency for the metrics that have been prioritised. The middleware can vary the combination of transport protocol and messaging pattern at will in order to adapt to changing network conditions or QoS priority changes. The middleware is explicitly loosely coupled with the applications and provides a high degree of scalability and flexibility with regards to its positioning within the architecture.

The means by which the middleware interfaces a respective application with the network will now be described with reference to FIGS. 11 and 12. FIG. 11 shows a structural overview of the middleware component 119, which in this embodiment is referred to as a Transport Level QoS Engine. The flow-chart of FIG. 12 illustrates the stages by which the application is interfaced with the network. The Transport Level QoS Engine initialises the communications and then allows direct communication afterwards. This will allow for a higher performance than, for example, other systems that use a single instance of middleware to proxy all service requests.

Commencing with step S121, one of the applications 111 a, 111 b 111 c sends its high level communications requirements to the application interface 110 of the middleware 119. The middleware 119 also includes a separate interface 112 configured to receive as input network health measurements (step S122). The communication requirements and network health measurements are together input into a selection algorithm (step S123), which in turn determines the optimum transport protocol and/or messaging pattern for the application (step S124). The middleware next executes the socket requestor 114, which sends a request to a generic third party socket API 116 (step S125). The socket API in turn generates a customised network socket, based on the transport protocol/messaging pattern supplied to it by the middleware component (step S126). Once the third party socket API has generated the socket, the socket details are sent to the remotely located middleware components to enable those remote middleware components to replicate the socket in order to have compatible communications (Step S127). The remote middleware components are informed each time the transport protocol/messaging pattern changes. The custom socket is passed to the application 111 a, which in turn uses the socket to establish a network link with another entity and to transmit data to that entity (Step S128). The socket interface provides the application with a generic interface to the complex transport and messaging pattern combination. The interface is typically a high speed interprocess connection to the generated custom socket, which resides within the middleware.

An example of steps implemented within the middleware is shown in the flowchart of FIG. 13, with the modular functions being summarised below.

void main( )

Main cyclic executive for the middleware

-   -   Runs setup( )     -   Runs execute_apps( )     -   Runs in an infinite loop: poll_sockets( ) and check_heartbeats(         )         void setup( )

Performs the start-up setup procedures

-   -   prints start up message     -   creates ZMQ context     -   creates hash containers:         -   address_to_info—ROUTER GUID string retrieves pointer to             workerinfo_t struct         -   appid_to_list—APPID string retrieves pointer to worker pool             zlist_t struct         -   poll_hash—Socket ID string retrieves pointer to ZMQ socket     -   Adds default sockets to poll hash:         -   Frontend IPC         -   Backend IPC         -   DEF_SUB PGM         -   DEF_PUB PGM     -   Adds endpoints to all default sockets         void execute_apps( )

Executes the software applications

-   -   Scans APPS/directory for *.o files     -   Forks and execs each binary app found         void poll_sockets( )

Cycles through the poll items array polling each socket for external activity

-   -   polls all sockets contained in the poll_items array     -   If one has messages waiting to be processed then receive it and         run parse_msg(msg)         void check_heartbeats( )

Checks all workers are alive and deals with them if they are not

-   -   Creates zlist_t of all worker addresses     -   Cycles through the list looking up the workerinfo_t for each         address through address_to_info     -   Checks the heartbeat member of the workerinfo_t agains the         current time     -   If the heartbeat time has passed the worker is dead—call         destroy_worker( )     -   Checks the lastwork member of the worker_info_t     -   If the last work received was too long ago and pool is >1—call         destroy_worker(char *address)         void destroy_worker(char *address)

Destroys worker and removes all information pertaining to it

-   -   Looks up the workerinfo_t pointer given the address string of         the worker to be destroyed     -   Creates the termination message and sends it to the worker     -   Get the worker pool zlist_t pointer member of the workerinfo_t     -   Remove the worker address from the worker pool     -   Free and delete all associated hashes and structures         workerinfo_t *get_worker_info(zmsg_t msg)

Retrieves the structure containing a worker's information

-   -   Gets worker GUID from the message     -   Looks up workerinfo_t pointer using address_to_info hash     -   If the pointer !=NULL then return it     -   Else pass the message and GUID to the add_worker function as         this is a new worker         workerinfo_t *add_worker(zframe_t *address, zmsg_t *msg)

Adds a new worker to a specific pool and populates and returns its workerinfo_t structure

-   -   Malloc a new workerinfo_t structure     -   Set the address_ptr and address members of the structure     -   Extract APP_ID frame and parse     -   Add worker GUID to appropriate application pool if the pool         exists     -   If the pool does not exist then create the zlist (pool) and add         it to the appid_to_list hash     -   Set the pool pointer member if the worker's workerinfo_t     -   Set the worker's last worker time and heartbeat status     -   Return the freshly generated workerinfo_t         void add_socket_poll(void *socket_ptr,char *ID)

Adds a new socket to the poll items array

-   -   If passed socket is NULL then remove the socket hashes with the         char *ID     -   Else add the passed pointer the socket hash along with its         handle (ID)     -   Add the socket to the zmq_pollitem_t socket array         void generate_socket_si(zmsg_t *msg,int *socket_type)

Generates a new socket from information contained within a SI (socket initiation) message—remote initiation

-   -   Extracts the socket ID and endpoint from the passed SI message     -   Calls add_socket_poll and passes freshly generated socket     -   Binds socket to the extracted endpoint     -   Sets PUB subscriptions if needed         void session_init(void * socket, char * ID)

Performs the session initiation when an unknown destination is specified as a destination.

-   -   Generates the SI message—message format:         -   1. “SI” (String)         -   2. Socket type (INT)         -   3. ID (String)         -   4. Endpoint (String)         -   5. SUB (String, optional)     -   Sends the message to remote middleware—PUBLISHES it using         multicast with the topic set to frame 1 i.e. “SI”         void * generate_socket_req(zmsg_t *msg)

Local middleware is generating a new socket based on application specified requirements and current network health

-   -   Extracts prioritised metric frame—Latency, Reliability,         Bandwidth     -   Extracts estimated fan-out frame     -   Extracts destination frame     -   Lookup table specifying transport and messaging pattern         combinations based on above and network health     -   Generates the socket and adds it to the poll array using         add_socket_poll     -   Calls session_init with generated socket which generates the SI         message to send to the remote middleware         void fwd_work(zmsg_t *msg, char *dest_str)

Gets work message from either local workers or remote middleware and forwards it to the correct destination

-   -   Removes the senders GUID or topic frame     -   Checks if the dest_str is a local worker pool     -   If it is retrieve an idle worker, modify the clone flag and         forward the message to it     -   If it is not then call generate_socket_req         void parse_msg(zmsg_t *msg)

Checks for various message markers and calls the correct functions to parse the message

-   -   Checks for markers using the msg_extract function     -   If the heartbeat marker exists, update the workerinfo_t for that         worker and send it back     -   If the RDY marker exists and worker has completed working and         needs to be added back to the idle list     -   If the CLN marker exists a new worker instance needs to the         forked and exec'd     -   If the DST marker exists, fwd work is called     -   If the SI marker exists, generate_socket_si is called     -   If the HLH marker exists, current network health is updated         void *msg_extract(zmsg_t *full_msg,const char *tag,int         operation)

Cycles through every frame in a message looking for the specified string. Once found it performs the specified operation.

In summary, embodiments described herein provide advantages including:

-   -   i) The ability to have much greater control to deliver against         application QoS requirements.     -   ii) The ability to adapt to changing network conditions at a         lower level than before, providing the potential for increased         performance especially in resource constrained and lossy         networks.     -   iii) The ability to support legacy applications (i.e. those not         specifically designed with this technology in mind) with only         very minor modifications.

While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Indeed, the novel methods, devices and systems described herein may be embodied in a variety of forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the methods and systems described herein may be made without departing from the scope of the invention. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope of the invention. 

1. A method of establishing a network connection between an application hosted on a first network device and a second network device, comprising: receiving data from the application indicating communication requirements for the network connection; identifying a plurality of alternative available transport level components; and based on the received data, selecting one of the transport level components for use in the network connection.
 2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of transport level components includes one or more transport protocols.
 3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the plurality of transport level components includes one or more messaging patterns.
 4. A method according to claim 1, wherein the transport level component is chosen so as to optimise the quality of service (QoS) of the network connection.
 5. A method according to claim 1, wherein the communication requirements relate to one or more of the latency and bandwidth required for the network connection.
 6. A method according to claim 1, wherein the choice of the transport level component is varied during the course of a single session between the application and the second network device.
 7. A method according to claim 6, wherein a first one of the available transport level components is selected during initiation of the session and an alternative one of the available transport level components is subsequently selected during that same session.
 8. A method according to claim 1, wherein the method includes receiving information about the network environment and the choice of transport level component is determined at least in part based on the information.
 9. A method according to claim 8, wherein the selection of transport level components is varied overtime in response to changes in the network environment.
 10. A method according to claim 1, wherein the first network device hosts a plurality of applications and the method comprises establishing a respective network connection for each application, the selection of transport components being carried out independently for each application.
 11. A method according to claim 10, comprising generating a respective network socket for each application, the socket being generated based on the transport components selected for that application's network connection.
 12. A method according to claim 1, comprising transmitting data from the application to the second network device across the network connection.
 13. A device for establishing a network socket for connecting an application to a communications network, the device comprising: a middleware component configured to interface with the application and to receive data from the application indicating communication requirements of the application; the middleware being operable to identify a plurality of alternative available transport level components for use in communicating data from the application over the network and to select one of the transport level components for generating the network socket.
 14. A device according to claim 13, wherein the plurality of transport level components includes one or more transport protocols.
 15. A device according to claim 12 or 13, wherein the plurality of transport level components includes one or more messaging patterns.
 16. A device according to claim 15, wherein the transport level component is chosen so as to optimise the quality of service QoS of the network connection.
 17. A device according to claim 13, wherein the communication requirements relate to one or more of the latency and bandwidth required for the network connection.
 18. A device according to claim 13, wherein the middleware component is configured to vary the choice of the transport level component during the course of a single session between the application and the second network device.
 19. A device according to claim 18, wherein the middleware component is configured to select a first one of the available transport level components during initiation of the session and to subsequently select an alternative one of the available transport level components during that same session.
 20. A device according to claim 13, wherein the middleware is configured to receive as input information about the network environment and to select the transport level component at least in part based on the information.
 21. A device according to claim 13, wherein the middleware is configured to interface with a plurality of applications and to receive data from each application indicating communication requirements of the respective application; the middleware being operable to select a transport level component for generating a respective network socket for each application, wherein the transport level components are selected independently for each application.
 22. A device according to claim 13 or 21, wherein each application is hosted on the device.
 23. A system comprising a plurality of devices according to claim
 22. 24. A system comprising a network device that hosts one or more applications; and one or more devices according to claim 13 or
 21. 25. A computer readable storage medium comprising computer executable instructions that when executed by the computer will cause the compute to carry out a method according to claim
 1. 